Road Trip to Upper Peninsula of Michigan
Urban’s Ashes - Day 1
I left home at exactly 7 AM and drove to Aiken, SC to pick up Tom, my travel buddy for the trip to Lexington, Kentucky.
Upon arrival at the McDonalds Restaurant, Tom produced a surprise. His 92-year-old father, Urban, passed away last week and his last request was that his ashes be taken back to his home in Wisconsin for interment. Therefore, we are now carrying Urban’s ashes with us; hence, the title for my journal – Urban’s Ashes.
We made great time all the way to the Kentucky border. Then we stopped for a map and got into a conversation with the docent at the welcome center. He suggested that we go over a few miles to see Cumberland Falls, and then I saw a picture on the wall behind him of another waterfall. When I asked, he said it was “a few miles” from Cumberland.
We took his advice and went off route to Cumberland Falls, a nice waterfall with a ¾ mile hike to it from the road. Cumberland Falls is the only waterfall in the Western Hemisphere that has a “moonbow”, a rainbow that shows at night when the moon is full. We could have stayed to see it, had we been inclined to do so, because that night there was a full moon in a cloudless sky. However, we had to move on.
Then we headed for the other waterfall, called Yahoo Falls. It turned out to be about 25 miles from Cumberland in the wrong direction from our destination. In addition, the last few miles were over dirt road.
When we finally reached the trail to Yahoo Falls, after 6 PM, we discovered that it required a hike of 1½ miles out and the same distance back to the parking lot. We took a pass on Yahoo Falls (and cursed the docent for misleading us.)
The drive from Yahoo Falls to our hotel took over two more hours, and we arrived at 9 o’clock. On the way, we passed a Kentucky town called Somerset. There was a classic car show in town, and the people—hundreds of them—were sitting along the road on lawn cars or on the hoods or tailgates of their cars or trucks.
The cars were parading up and down the street along with the regular traffic, so we were surrounded by several of them. It was reminiscent of the Subaru commercial where the couple drives a dirty car into a town and gets to be the first care behind a parade. What a hoot! This went on for about five miles before we broke out of town and could resume speed.
We finally arrived at our hotel in Lexington at 9 o’clock.
Oh well, it was nice scenery along the way…
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...d_Falls_KY.jpg
We found this sign at the bottom of the ¾-mile trail to Cumberland Falls. We could have driven down there in about two minutes instead of walking all that way.
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...d_Falls_KY.jpg
Cumberland Falls is no Niagara, but it does have one feature that no other falls in the Western Hemisphere has—a moonbow.
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...m/DSCN0855.JPG
I hope you can read the sign to learn about the moonbow. I wish we could have stayed to see it, but our hotel was still several hundred miles away.
I'd love to see that some day
This is first I had heard of a moonbow. Pretty cool.
Mark
Whoa! Those cherry trees look great
Yeah, those are some mighty fine looking cherry trees!
Nice report thus far.
Mark
Urban's Ashes - Day 10 (The Last Day)
Urban’s Ashes – Day 10
The road trip is winding down, and we only have two days to go. Starting out early this
morning from our hotel at Horse Cave, Kentucky, or logical destination was Mammoth
Cave National Park. It is only a few miles down the road, and we arrived before the
doors to the visitor Center were open, so we stood in line with about a dozen others.
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...mmoth_Cave.JPG
Tom posed by the entrance to show he has actually been to a cave and went inside.
One advantage of early arrival is that you get the early tours and, if you have time, you
can even take two different ones the same day. We bought tickets for the Frozen
Niagara tour, which started at 8:30 and lasted 1-¼ hours.
Since Tom had never been in a cave before, I chose a tour that goes to the “wet” cave,
where flowstone, curtains, soda straws, stalagmites and stalactites are in abundance.
Most of Mammoth Cave is “dry”, and only a small portion has these features. I know tom
would have liked to spend more time at the cave and take another tour, but I thought we
had a lot more that we could do along the road, so we departed at 10:30.
(Here is a tip for anyone out there that goes to a cave and wants to take pictures. All of
the pictures below, plus the dozen or so others that I took inside Mammoth Cave were
taken without flash. When you take pictures in that environment, which is already lit up
by artificial colored lights, your flash will overpower those colors and make the surfaces
look white or gray. Let your camera adjust to the colors you are seeing by disabling the
flash while inside the cave. Your photos will look like what you saw if you do that.)
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...Cave_Bacon.jpg
This picture shows several formations, including flowstone, curtains, stalactites and "cave bacon."
I mentioned that Bowling Green is home to the Corvette plant and has a good Corvette
Museum next to it, but Tom didn’t seem to have any interest in going there, so we
passed by and continued on to Nashville.
We skirted Nashville on the Briley Parkway, which goes past the new Grand Ole Opry
Theater, because I wanted to see what damage the earlier floods had done there. It was
extensive, and a lot of rebuilding was going on. All of the large stores that flank the
theater were also closed and looked horrible.
The day seemed to be one of missed opportunities. We wanted to visit a distillery that I
knew was just off I-24 between Nashville and Chattanooga, but somehow we drove on
past the exit and never saw the sign for it. Due to the lack of touring, we arrived at our
destination, Chattanooga, at 4 PM.
I had reserved a room at a hotel west of town, due to its proximity to some optional
sights, Ruby Falls and Rock City. I knew both to be privately owned enterprises up on
Lookout Mountain, so I wasn’t too disappointed to learn that Tom wasn’t in the mood to
go see more attractions. I still had one place to visit, however, so I left him at the motel
room and started a solo quest.
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo..._Canyon_SP.jpg
Cloudland Canyon State Park is rather remote and caters to campers and hikers
more than road trippers. It certainly is pretty though.
My destination turned out to be a little farther away than I thought. I drove for miles over
a two-lane highway to get to a Georgia state park named Cloudland Canyon. The name
implied a high and scenic place, and it didn’t disappoint on that score. The only flaw I
found is that it is a park for hikers and campers, neither of which I am. There appeared
to be only one overlook in the park accessible by road. The rest was for to hikers only.
It is beautiful and pretty wild looking, though, so it was worth the time and effort to see it.
Once I got back to the hotel, were able to go downtown to get a nice early dinner. We
found a nice Italian/American restaurant on Broad Street, the Bluewater Grill, and both
had excellent meals at a reasonable price.
We were back at the hotel by dusk, and I actually retired early for the first time on the
entire trip. Tomorrow is an easy day with a five-hour drive to get back home, so with that
on the agenda, I am wrapping up this trip journal. It has been fun and we saw most of
what we had planned. I think we got along well, and I certainly appreciated having Tom
along to converse with and to share the scenery as well as the expenses.
Oh yes, I’m already in the late planning stages for another trip this summer with my wife.
We’re heading out west again. This will be a two-week sojourn to at least two places we
never have seen before, Capitol Reef and El Malpais National Parks. I’ll journal that
one, too.
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...ve_Cricket.jpg
We did see some wildlife in Mammoth Cave. Here is a cave cricket. I wonder if he
had a tiny camera and was taking my picture at the same time.
http://www.roadtripamerica.com/photo...e_Grafitti.jpg
Before mammoth Cave became a national park, the owner used to allow people to
pay him to etch their names or other graffiti in the cave. Here is some of that. You
can see that a Perdue Boilermaker was here in 1926. Today, of course, the policy
is “Leave only footprints, take only memories.”